• Severance season 2 trailer reveals Marks new mission
    www.digitaltrends.com
    In Severance season 2, Mark (Adam Scott) still has plenty of questions, but only one mission on his mind. At this years CCXP24, Apple TV+ unveiled the first full trailer for Severances long-awaited second season, which offers viewers their best look yet at whats to come in the hit sci-fi seriess new episodes.Severance season 1 ends with Mark, Helly (Britt Lower), Dylan (Zach Cherry), and Irving (John Turturro) exposing to the outside world the torment that their innie work selves endure at Lumon Industries. In the new Severance season 2 trailer, Lumon floor supervisor Seth Milchick (Tramell Tillman) tells Mark that this act of rebellion has made him and his co-workers the face of severance reform. Mark, however, has his mind set this season solely on rescuing Ms. Casey (Dichen Lachman), the wellness counselor hes discovered is his outies dead wife.Recommended VideosThings, unfortunately, dont seem any less dangerous at Lumon now than they were before. On the contrary, it looks like Mark and co. are going to have to continue fighting not only Milchick and his devious managerial methods but potentially also Hellys outie, the ruthless daughter of Lumons CEO, who ominously tells Harmony Cobel (Patricia Arquette) in the new Severance trailer that she and her fellow Lumon higher-ups fear no one.When Severance returns, it will do so with a few additional cast members, including Gwendoline Christie (Game of Thrones), Merritt Wever (Unbelievable), Alia Shawkat (Search Party), and John Noble (Fringe). Details about their new characters remain shrouded in mystery. Some of them have been briefly featured, though, in the early trailers for Severance season 2, which Apple TV+ promises will follow the shows core heroes as they learn the dire consequences of trifling with the severance barrier.Please enable Javascript to view this contentFans have been waiting nearly three years for Severance to return. The series made a splash when it debuted on Apple TV+ in February 2022, and it went on to earn 14 Emmy Award nominations, including nods in the Outstanding Drama Series, Outstanding Directing, Lead Actor, Supporting Actress, and Supporting Actor categories. Apple TV+ no doubt hopes that the series will be able to match the success of its first season when it finally returns next year. Fortunately, Severance season 2 so far looks exactly like the escalation in stakes, intensity, and surreality that fans have been wanting.RelatedSeverance season 2 premieres January 17 on Apple TV+.Editors Recommendations
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  • Im running out of reasons not to ditch Windows for good
    www.digitaltrends.com
    Table of ContentsTable of ContentsIt just worksThe Mac gaming machinePaying the priceAs of now, I spend my time split between a Windows PC and a MacBook Pro. Both serve their purpose to my needs, and as much as Id like to unify everything into one device, I havent found a single machine that could truly fit.Then, the M4 Mac mini came out. As Ive considered a purchase, it has me rethinking my entire setup.Recommended VideosThe surprising bit? Rather than replacing my MacBook Pro as you might expect, Im seeing more and more reason to ditch my PC entirely and leave Windows behind for good. Caleb Denison / Digital TrendsSwitching from Windows to macOS would make my life a whole lot easier. Right now, Ive got to work across different operating systems, remember different keyboard shortcuts, share files between my devices in different ways, and more. Its a real hassle when it happens on a daily basis.RelatedAnd then there are the constant little annoyances that come with Windows. Ive used Microsofts operating system ever since I first became interested in computers more than 20 years ago, and Ive had gripes with it for just about as long. Every Windows user can tell you about a different bug that they regularly suffer through, from apps crashing and freezing to weird visual quirks and odd system behavior. Its just part of the Windows experience.As someone who uses both Windows and macOS, I can tell you from experience that those irritations are far rarer on Apples operating system. Not only is macOS a different way of working but its a much more pleasant one, too. Its one example where Apples famous it just works adage is more than just marketing guff compared to Windows grating bugginess, its a key selling point.Not only would eliminating Windows from my life put the sword to those problems but it would make my life easier in other ways. Instead of sharing files using a mix of Dropbox and AirDrop (depending on which device Im using at the time), I could flip everything over to AirDrop. The best Windows apps I use on a daily basis work perfectly on macOS, and theres a thriving ecosystem of the best Mac apps that arent available on Windows computers. Theres a lot to gain from making the switch.AppleTheres another big reason for me to end my friendship with Windows. Over the last few years, the main thing that has stopped me from permanently giving up on Windows has been gaming. I play a lot of games, and the PC worlds combination of powerful discrete GPUs and unparalleled games compatibility is something the Mac simply has not been able to match for years.With the M4 Mac range, though, thats all changing. In our M4 Pro Mac mini review, we found its gaming performance to be roughly on par with the Nvidia RTX 4060 graphics card. My current Windows PC contains an RTX 3070, which likely offers slightly better performance than the M4 Pro. So why would I want to drop down graphically?Well, its not quite as simple as that. The games I play the most right now the likes of Stardew Valley and Football Manager are not exactly graphically intense. Those games I play that are more graphically intense Baldurs Gate 3, Cyberpunk 2077 are now readily available on the Mac. With the M4 Pro, they run as smoothly as I need them to.My concern would be for future titles will the M4 Pro be able to keep up as games get progressively more demanding? Although the progress is promising, there are no promises. The good news is that, knowing myself, this will be a minor concern. My Steam backlog is a mile long and Im not the type of gamer who wants to play everything at 4K resolution, 240 frames per second, ray-tracing-enabled, melt-my-face-off quality. The fact that my most-played game over the last month is a pixel art farm simulator should attest to that fact.Chris Hagan / Digital TrendsMigrating from Windows to macOS is not a total slam dunk in favor of Team Apple. For one thing, I love planning and building my own PCs, and being able to pack so much power into a small-form-factor case was a major draw for me. The Mac mini can beat my PC hands down when it comes to the titchy footprint, but Apple is famously restrictive when it comes to Mac customizations. There would be no more custom PC building for me if I went all-in on macOS.As well as that, theres the annoying power button placement on the Mac mini. It might not seem like much, but Im one of those rare dinosaurs that still fully turns off their computer at the end of each day instead of just sending it to sleep. Using the awkward power button would be a daily occurrence, and Id probably have to build some sort of custom switch to stop myself from going insane.Ultimately, though, those are hardly dealbreakers for me, especially since I only build a new PC once every few years and could just put the Mac mini to sleep instead of switching it off. The attraction of operating within a unified ecosystem, alongside Apples newfound gaming enthusiasm, means the benefits outweigh the drawbacks.The only remaining hitch is the one that has plagued Apple fans for years: the price. You really do pay for Apple quality, and in my case, getting a new Mac mini is likely to set me back somewhere in the region of $3,000. I need 4TB of storage and the M4 Pro chip, while Im unsure if the Mac minis 24GB of memory will be enough to match my PCs 32GB, even considering its superior unified architecture. Those upgrades are enough to make your eyes water.But if shelling out on a souped-up Mac mini lets me unify my desk setup, purge Windows annoyances from my life, and still enjoy the games I love the most, it could be a price worth paying. Now all Ive got to do is start saving.Editors Recommendations
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  • Amazon Faces Deadline to Set Bargaining Dates for Delivery-, Warehouse-Worker Pact
    www.wsj.com
    The International Brotherhood of Teamsters said it is giving Amazon.com a deadline of Dec. 15 to agree to bargaining dates to negotiate a union contract for its delivery drivers and warehouse workers.
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  • Where a Top Venture Capitalist Turns for Help and Inspiration
    www.wsj.com
    Alfred Lin, the co-head of Sequoias venture business, leans on colleagues and the founders hes backed to continue growing and learning.
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  • My Love-Hate Relationship With Sinatras New York, New York
    www.wsj.com
    The song is my fathers favorite, which made growing up in Illinois feel like exile.
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  • The Best Books of 2024 and More
    www.wsj.com
    Our reviewers select their favorites, and dozens of newsmakers tell us about the books that mattered in a tumultuous year.
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  • Teen creates memecoin, dumps it, earns $50,000
    arstechnica.com
    dontbuy. Seriously, don't buy it Teen creates memecoin, dumps it, earns $50,000 Unsurprisingly, he and his family were doxed by angry traders. Joel Khalili. wired.com Dec 7, 2024 7:15 am | 154 Credit: Wong Yu Liang via Getty Credit: Wong Yu Liang via Getty Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreOn the evening of November 19, art adviser Adam Biesk was finishing work at his California home when he overheard a conversation between his wife and son, who had just come downstairs. The son, a kid in his early teens, was saying he had made a ton of money on a cryptocurrency that he himself had created.Initially, Biesk ignored it. He knew that his son played around with crypto, but to have turned a small fortune before bedtime was too far-fetched. We didnt really believe it, says Biesk. But when the phone started to ring off the hook and his wife was flooded with angry messages on Instagram, Biesk realized that his son was telling the truthif not quite the full story.Earlier that evening, at 7:48 pm PT, Biesks son had released into the wild 1 billion units of a new crypto coin, which he named Gen Z Quant. Simultaneously, he spent about $350 to purchase 51 million tokens, about 5 percent of the total supply, for himself.Then he started to livestream himself on Pump.Fun, the website he had used to launch the coin. As people tuned in to see what he was doing, they started to buy into Gen Z Quant, leading the price to pitch sharply upward.By 7:56 pm PT, a whirlwind eight minutes later, Biesk's sons tokens were worth almost $30,000and he cashed out. No way. Holy fuck! Holy fuck! he said, flipping two middle fingers to the webcam, with tongue sticking out of his mouth. Holy fuck! Thanks for the twenty bandos. After he dumped the tokens, the price of the coin plummeted, so large was his single trade.To the normie ear, all this might sound impossible. But in the realm of memecoins, a type of cryptocurrency with no purpose or utility beyond financial speculation, its relatively routine. Although many people lose money, a few have been known to make a lotand fast.In this case, Biesks son had seemingly performed what is known as a soft rug pull, whereby somebody creates a new crypto token, promotes it online, then sells off their entire holdings either swiftly or over time, sinking its price. These maneuvers occupy something of a legal gray area, lawyers say, but are roundly condemned in the cryptosphere as ethically dubious at the least.After dumping Gen Z Quant, Biesks son did the same thing with two more coinsone called im sorry and another called my dog lucybringing his takings for the evening to more than $50,000.The backlash was swift and ferocious. A torrent of abuse began to pour into the chat log on Pump.Fun, from traders who felt they had been swindled. You little fucking scammer, wrote one commenter. Soon, the names and pictures of Biesk, his son, and other family members were circulating on X. They had been doxed. Our phone started blowing up. Just phone call after phone call, says Biesk. It was a very frightening situation.As part of their revenge campaign, crypto traders continued to buy into Gen Z Quant, driving the coins price far higher than the level at which Biesks son had cashed out. At its peak, around 3 am PT the following morning, the coin had a theoretical total value of $72 million; the tokens the teenager had initially held were worth more than $3 million. Even now, the trading frenzy has died down, and they continue to be valued at twice the amount he received.In the end, a lot of people made money on his coin. But for us, caught in the middle, there was a lot of emotion, says Biesk. The online backlash became so frighteningly scary that the realization that he made money was kind of tempered down with the fact that people became angry and started bullying.Biesk concedes to a limited understanding of crypto. But he sees little distinction between what his son did and, say, playing the stock market or winning at a casino. Though under California law, someone must be at least 18 years old to gamble or invest in stocks, the unregulated memecoin market, which has been compared to a casino in risk profile, had given Biesks teenage son early access to a similar arena, in which some must lose for others to profit. The way I understand it is he made money and he cashed out, which to me seems like that's what anybody would've done, says Biesk. You get people who are cheering at the craps table, or angry at the craps table.Memecoins have been around since 2013, when Dogecoin was released. In the following years, a few developers tried to replicate the success of Dogecoin, making play of popular internet memes or tapping into the zeitgeist in some other way in a bid to encourage people to invest. But the cost and complexity of development generally limited the number of memecoins that came to market.That equation was flipped in January with the launch of Pump.Fun, which lets people release new memecoins instantly, at no cost. The idea was to give people a safer way to trade memecoins by standardizing the underlying code, which prevents developers from building in malicious mechanisms to steal funds, in whats known as a hard rug pull.Buying into memecoins was a very unsafe thing to do. Programmers could create systems that would obfuscate what you are buying into and, basically, behave as malicious actors. Everything was designed to suck money out of people, one of the three anonymous cofounders of Pump.Fun, who goes by Sapijiju, told WIRED earlier in the year. The idea with Pump was to build something where everyone was on the same playing field.Since Pump.Fun launched, millions of unique memecoins have entered the market through the platform. By some metrics, Pump.Fun is the fastest-growing crypto application ever, taking in more than $250 million in revenueas a 1 percent cut of trades on the platformin less than a year in operation.However, Pump.Fun has found it impossible to insulate users from soft rug pulls. Though the platform gives users access to information to help assess risklike the proportion of a coin belonging to the largest few holderssoft rug pulls are difficult to prevent by technical means, claims Sapijiju.People say theres a bunch of different stuff you can do to block [soft rug pulls]maybe a sell tax or lock up the people who create the coin. Truthfully, all of this is very easy to manipulate, he says. Whatever we do to stop people doing this, theres always a way to circumnavigate if youre smart enough. The important thing is creating an interface that is as simple as possible and giving the tools for users to see if a coin is legitimate or not.The overwhelming majority of new crypto tokens entering the market are scams of one form or another, designed expressly to squeeze money from buyers, not to hold a sustained value in the long term, according to crypto security company Blockaid. In the period since memecoin launchpads like Pump.Fun began to gain traction, the volume of soft rug pulls has increased in lockstep, says Ido Ben-Natan, Blockaid founder.I generally agree that it is kind of impossible to prevent holistically. Its a game of cat and mouse, says Ben-Natan. Its definitely impossible to cover a hundred percent of these things. But it definitely is possible to detect repeat offenders, looking at metadata and different kinds of patterns.Now memecoin trading has been popularized, there can be no putting the genie back in the bottle, says Ben-Natan. But traders are perhaps uniquely vulnerable at present, he says, in a period when many are newly infatuated with memecoins, yet before the fledgling platforms have figured out the best way to protect them. The space is immature, says Ben-Natan.Whether it is legal to perform a rug pull is also something of a gray area. It depends on both jurisdiction and whether explicit promises are made to prospective investors, experts say. The absence of bespoke crypto regulations in countries like the US, meanwhile, inadvertently creates cloud cover for acts that are perhaps not overtly illegal.These actions exploit the gaps in existing regulatory frameworks, where unethical behaviorlike developers hyping a project and later abandoning itmight not explicitly violate laws if no fraudulent misrepresentation, contractual breach, or other violations occur, says Ronghui Gu, cofounder of crypto security firm CertiK and associate professor of computer science at Columbia University.The Gen Z Quant broadcast is no longer available to view in full, but in the clips reviewed by WIRED, at no point does Biesks son promise to hold his tokens for any specific period. Neither do the Pump.Fun terms of use require people to refrain from selling tokens they create. (Sapijiju, the Pump.Fun cofounder, declined to comment on the Gen Z Quant incident. They say that Pump.Fun will be introducing age restrictions in future, but declined to elaborate.)But even then, under the laws of numerous US states, among them California, the developer likely still owes heightened legal duties to the investors, so may be liable for breaching obligations that result in loss of value, says Geoffrey Berg, partner at law firm Berg Plummer & Johnson. The developer is in a position of trust and must place the interests of his investors over his own.To clarify whether these legal duties apply to people who release memecoins through websites like Pump.Funwho buy into their coins like everyone else, albeit at the moment of launch and therefore at a discount and in potentially market-swinging quantitiesnew laws may be required.In July 2026, a new regime will take effect in California, where Biesks family lives, requiring residents to obtain a license to take part in digital financial asset business activity, including exchanging, transferring, storing or administering certain crypto assets. President-elect Donald Trump has also promised new crypto regulations. But for now, there are no crypto-specific laws in place.We are in a legal vacuum where there are no clear laws, says Andrew Gordon, partner at law firm Gordon Law. Once we know what is in bounds, we will also know what is out of bounds. This will hopefully create a climate where rug pulls don't happen, or when they do they are seen as a criminal violation.On November 19, as the evening wore on, angry messages continued to tumble in, says Biesk. Though some celebrated his son's antics, calling for him to return and create another coin, others were threatening or aggressive. Your son stole my fucking money, wrote one person over Instagram.Biesk and his wife were still trying to understand quite how their son was able to make so much money, so fast. I was trying to get an understanding of exactly how this meme crypto trading works, says Biesk.Some memecoin traders, sensing there could be money in riffing off the turn of events, created new coins on Pump.Fun inspired by Biesk and his wife: QUANT DAD and QUANTS MOM. (Both are now practically worthless.)Equally disturbed and bewildered, Biesk and his wife formed a provisional plan: to make all public social media accounts private, stop answering the phone, and, generally, hunker down until things blew over. (Biesks account is active at the time of writing.) Biesk declined to comment on whether the family made contact with law enforcement or what would happen to the funds, saying only that his son would put the money away.A few hours later, an X account under the name of Biesks son posted on X, pleading for people to stop contacting his parents. Im sorry about Quant, I didnt realize I get so much money. Please dont write to my parents, I wiill pay you back [sic], read the post. Biesk claims the account is not operated by his son.Though alarmed by the backlash, Biesk is impressed by the entrepreneurial spirit and technical capability his son displayed. Its actually sort of a sophisticated trading platform, he says. He obviously learned it on his own.That his teenager was capable of making $50,000 in an evening, Biesk theorizes, speaks to the fundamentally different relationship kids of that age have with money and investing, characterized by an urgency and hyperactivity that rubs up against traditional wisdom.To me, crypto can be hard to grasp, because there is nothing there behind itits not anything tangible. But I think kids relate to this intangible digital world more than adults do, says Biesk. This has an immediacy to him. Its almost like he understands this better.On December 1, after a two-week hiatus, Biesks son returned to Pump.Fun to launch five new memecoins, apparently undeterred by the abuse. Disregarding the warnings built into the very names of some of the new coinsone was named test and another dontbuypeople bought in. Biesks son made another $5,000.This story originally appeared on wired.com.Joel Khalili. wired.com Wired.com is your essential daily guide to what's next, delivering the most original and complete take you'll find anywhere on innovation's impact on technology, science, business and culture. 154 Comments
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  • 2025 Lamborghini Urus SE first drive: The total taurean package
    arstechnica.com
    A 789-horsepower Goldilocks moment 2025 Lamborghini Urus SE first drive: The total taurean package Adding electric power and a battery turns the Urus from hit-or-miss to just right. Tim Stevens Dec 7, 2024 7:00 am | 49 Credit: Tim Stevens Credit: Tim Stevens Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreLamborghini provided flights from Albany, New York, to Bologna, Italy, and accommodation so Ars could drive the Urus SE. Ars does not accept paid editorial content.The original Urus was an SUV that nobody particularly wanted, even if the market was demanding it. With luxury manufacturers tripping over themselves to capitalize on a seemingly limitless demand for taller all-around machines, Lamborghini was a little late to the party.The resulting SUV has done its job, boosting Lamborghini's sales and making up more than half of the company's volume last year. Even so, the first attempt was just a bit tame. That most aggressive of supercar manufacturers produced an SUV featuring the air of the company's lower, more outrageous performance machines, but it didn't quite deliver the level of prestige that its price demanded.The Urus Performante changed that, adding enough visual and driving personality to make itself a legitimately exciting machine to drive or to look at. Along the way, though, it lost a bit of the most crucial aspect of an SUV: everyday livability. On paper, the Urus SE is just a plug-in version of the Urus, with a big battery adding some emissions-free range. In reality, it's an SUV with more performance and more flexibility, too. This is the Urus' Goldilocks moment. If you're looking for something subtle, you shouldn't be looking at an Urus. Credit: Tim Stevens The whatThe Urus SE starts with the same basic platform as the other models in the line, including a 4.0 L turbocharged V8 that drives all four wheels through an eight-speed automatic and an all-wheel-drive system.All that has received a strong dose of electrification, starting with a 25.9 kWh battery pack sitting far out back that helps to offset the otherwise nose-heavy SUV while also adding a playful bit of inertia to its tail. More on that in a moment.That battery powers a 189 hp (141 kW) permanent-magnet synchronous electric motor fitted between the V8 and its transmission. The positioning means it has full access to all eight speeds and can drive the car at up to 81 mph (130 km/h). That, plus a Lamborghini-estimated 37 miles (60 km) of range, means this is a large SUV that could feasibly cover a lot of people's commutes emissions-free. The V8 lives here. Credit: Tim Stevens But when that electric motor's power is paired with the 4.0 V8, the result is 789 hp (588 kW) total system power delivered to all four wheels. And with the electric torque coming on strong and early, it not only adds shove but throttle response, too.Other updatesAt a glance, the Urus SE looks more or less the same as the earlier renditions of the same SUV. Look closer, though, and you'll spot several subtle changes, including a hood that eases more gently into the front fenders and a new spoiler out back that Lamborghini says boosts rear downforce by 35 percent over the Urus S.Far and away the most striking part of the car, though, are the 22-inch wheels wrapped around carbon-ceramic brakes. They give this thing the look of a rolling caricature of a sport SUV in the best way possible. On the body of the machine itself, you'll want to choose a properly eye-catching color, like the Arancio Egon you see here. I've been lucky to drive some pretty special SUVs over the years, and none have turned heads like this one did when cruising silently through a series of small Italian towns.Things are far more same-y on the inside. At first blush, nothing has changed inside the Urus SE, and that's OK. You have a few new hues of Technicolor hides to choose fromthe car you see here is outfitted in a similarly pungent orange to its exterior color, making it a citrus dream through and through. The sports seats aren't overly aggressive, offering more comfort than squeeze, but I'd say that's just perfect. Buttons and touchscreens vie with less conventional controls inside the Urus. Tim Stevens Buttons and touchscreens vie with less conventional controls inside the Urus. Tim Stevens The UX is not always the easiest. Tim Stevens The UX is not always the easiest. Tim Stevens Forward-looking sensors live in the front grille. Tim Stevens Forward-looking sensors live in the front grille. Tim Stevens The UX is not always the easiest. Tim Stevens Forward-looking sensors live in the front grille. Tim Stevens But that's all much the same as prior Urus versions. The central infotainment screen is slightly larger at 12.3 inches, and the software is lightly refreshed, but it's the same Audi-based system as before. A light skinning full of hexagons makes it look and feel a little more at home in a car with a golden bull on the nose.Unfortunately, while the car is quicker than the original model, the software isn't. The overall experience is somewhat sluggish, especially when moving through the navigation system. Even the regen meter on the digital gauge cluster doesn't change until a good half-second after you've pressed the brake pedal, an unfortunate place for lag.The Urus SE offers six drive modes: Strada (street), Sport, Corsa (track), Sabbia (sand), Terra (dirt), and Neve (snow). There's also a seventh, customizable Ego mode. As on earlier Urus models, these modes must be selected in that sequence. So if you want to go from Sport back to Strada, you need to cycle the mode selector knob five timesor go digging two submenus deep on the touchscreen.Those can be further customized via a few buttons added beneath the secondary drive mode lever on the right. The top button enables standard Hybrid mode, where the gasoline and electric powertrains work together as harmoniously as possible for normal driving. The second button enters Recharge mode, which instructs the car to prioritize battery charge. The third and lowest button enters Performance mode, which gives you maximum performance from the hybrid system at the expense of charge.Finally, a quick tug on the mode selector on the right drops the Urus into EV Drive.Silent runningI started my time in the Urus SE driving into the middle of town, which was full of narrow streets, pedestrian-friendly speed limits, and aggressively piloted Fiats. Slow and steady is the safest way in these situations, so I was happy to sample the Urus' all-electric mode.To put it simply, it delivers. There's virtually no noise from the drivetrain, a near-silent experience at lower speeds that help assuage the stress such situations can cause. The experience was somewhat spoiled by some tire noise, but I'll blame that on the Pirelli Scorpion Winter 2 tires outfitted here. I can't, however, blame the tires for a few annoying creaks and rattles, which isn't exactly what I'd expect from an SUV at this price point.Though there isn't much power at your disposal in this mode, the Urus can still scoot away from lights and stop signs quickly and easily, even ducking through small gaps in tiny roundabouts. It might not be subtle, but it can be practical. Credit: Tim Stevens Dip more than three-quarters of the way into the throttle, though, and that V8 fires up and quickly joins the fun. The hand-off here can be a little less than subtle as power output surges quickly, but in a moment, the car goes from a wheezy EV to a roaring Lamborghini. And unlike a lot of plug-ins that stubbornly refuse to shut their engines off again when this happens, another quick pull of the EV lever silences the thing.When I finally got out of town, I shifted over to Strada mode, the default mode for the Urus. I found this mode a little too lazy for my tastes, as it was reluctant to shift down unless I dipped far into the throttle, resulting in a bucking bull of acceleration when the eight-speed automatic finally complied.The car only really came alive when I put it into Sport mode and above.Shifting to SportAny hesitation or reluctance to shift is quickly obliterated as soon as you tug the drive mode lever into Sport. The SUV immediately forgets all about trying to be efficient, dropping a gear or two and making sure you're never far from the power band, keeping the turbo lag from the V8 to a minimum.The tachometer gets some red highlights in this mode, but you won't need to look at it. There's plenty of sound from the exhaust, augmented by some digital engine notes I found to be more distracting and unnecessary than anything. Most importantly, the overall feel of the car changes dramatically. It leaps forward with the slightest provocation of the right pedal, really challenging the grip of the tires.In my first proper sampling of the full travel of that throttle pedal, I was surprised at how quickly this latest Urus got frisky, kicking its tail out with an eager wag on a slight bend to the right. It wasn't scary, but it was just lively enough to make me smile and feel like I was something more than a passenger in a hyper-advanced, half-electric SUV. Credit: Tim Stevens In other words, it felt like a Lamborghini, an impression only reinforced as I dropped the SUV down to Corsa mode and really let it fly. The transmission is incredibly eager to drop gears on the slightest bit of deceleration, enough so that I rarely felt the need to reach for the column-mounted shift paddles.But despite the eagerness, the suspension remained compliant and everyday-livable in every mode. I could certainly feel the (many) imperfections in the rural Italian roads more when the standard air suspension was dialed over to its stiffest, but even then, it was never punishing. And in the softest setting, the SUV was perfectly comfortable despite those 22-inch wheels and tires.I didn't get a chance to sample the SUV's off-road prowess, but the SE carries a torque-vectoring rear differential like the Performante, which should mean it will be as eager to turn and drift on loose surfaces as that other, racier Urus.Both the Urus Performante and the SE start at a bit over $260,000, which means choosing between the two isn't a decision to be made on price alone. Personally, I'd much prefer the SE. It offers plenty of the charm and excitement of the Performante mixed with even better everyday capability than the Urus S. This one's just right. 49 Comments
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  • CFPB Presses Forward with Rule to Wrangle Data Brokers
    www.informationweek.com
    Shane Snider, Senior Writer, InformationWeekDecember 6, 20244 Min Readwsf AL via Alamy StockThe Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) on Tuesday signaled it would move ahead with a plan to expand the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) to include data brokers, which would limit companies ability to sell sensitive personal information.The rule would use FCRA to police the sale of financial data and credit scores, Social Security numbers, addresses, and phone numbers. CFPB says the protections are especially important with the rise of artificial intelligence.By selling our most sensitive personal data without our knowledge or consent, data brokers can profit by enabling scamming, stalking, and spying, Rohit Chopra, CFPBs director, said in a statement. The CFPBs proposed rule will curtail these practices that threaten our personal safety and undermine Americas national security.But the plan could hinge on President-elect Donald Trumps cost-cutting measures. Trump tapped Elon Musk and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy to lead the Department of Government Efficiency with the goal of cutting waste and fraud. Musk directly attacked the CFPB last week on X (formerly Twitter), calling for action to Delete CFPB, adding, There are too many duplicative regulatory agencies.The data broker industry is a big business with a massive lobbying spend -- doling out $143 million on lobbying from 2020-2022, according to research from data privacy firm Incogni. The CFPBs budget reached $729 million in 2024 with a total of 1,758 employees. The agency, which was the brainchild of US Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), boasts $19.6 billion in consumer relief since its inception in 2011.Related:Adopted in 1970, FCRA was a landmark piece of legislation aimed at protecting consumer privacy initially aimed at financial institutions. The proposed rule would broaden the law to include data brokers and apply the same standards to consumer reporting agencies like Equifax, Experian, and Transunion. The new rule would apply to data brokers obtaining personal data relating to credit and financial assessment, making them demonstrate permissible purpose" for sharing that information, and limiting use without consent.What the Incoming Administration Could Mean for CFPBAdam Rust, director of financial services for the Consumer Federation of America, tells InformationWeek in a phone interview that the proposed rule would be a major win for consumers.People shouldnt have to worry about their data being sold everywhere just because they want to apply for a loan, Rust says. [CFPBs proposed rule] actually addresses a real-world problem that affects all kinds of people We have all kinds of problems with data brokers relating to how they store information, and thats led to widespread breaches.Related:Rust thinks the issue should be nonpartisan, but CFPB has detractors who believe the governments role should be limited. There are enemies of the CFPB because the CFPB is so successful at doing what it is designed to do. Billionaires dont like the CFPB because they have to return billions of dollars to consumers. The financial institutions that are held accountable because of the CFPB are doing their best find friends in Washington D.C. who can rally to their cause.While Musks comments toward CFPB put the agency in cost-cutting crosshairs, finding enough support to kill its consumer protection efforts could be a difficult task. Data privacy efforts, especially concerning sensitive information, have gained broad support.Last year, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) fought for a bill to protect data of military members, preventing sale by data brokers to adversarial nations. The bill didnt reach a vote, but data privacy remains a hot-button topic. Rubio is Trumps choice for Secretary of State.A Bipartisan Cause?While members of the new administration may be gunning to trim operations like CFPB, they may have a hard time getting the 60 Senate member votes needed to nix the agency. Republicans won a majority of the Senate seats in November, but they hold 53 seats and could still be stymied by filibuster.Related:Emily Peterson-Cassin, director of Demand Progress Education Fund, said protections that keep data out of the hands of threat actors should be bipartisan.The CFPB should be applauded for standing up to data brokers and working to rein in the sale of sensitive information about us, she said in a statement. All this data ends up in the hands of advertisers, scammers, stalkers and even foreign governments. This groundbreaking rule offers a needed solution for Americans who are sick and tired of being inundated by scam texts, calls and emails She added that the proposed rule would be a major win for the privacy rights of Americans and is the kind of bipartisan, commonsense action that should be protected and encouraged by politicians in both parties.Read more about:RegulationAbout the AuthorShane SniderSenior Writer, InformationWeekShane Snider is a veteran journalist with more than 20 years of industry experience. He started his career as a general assignment reporter and has covered government, business, education, technology and much more. He was a reporter for the Triangle Business Journal, Raleigh News and Observer and most recently a tech reporter for CRN. He was also a top wedding photographer for many years, traveling across the country and around the world. He lives in Raleigh with his wife and two children.See more from Shane SniderNever Miss a Beat: Get a snapshot of the issues affecting the IT industry straight to your inbox.SIGN-UPYou May Also LikeWebinarsMore WebinarsReportsMore Reports
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  • The best science and technology documentaries of 2024
    www.newscientist.com
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